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A lone infection may have changed the course of the pandemic

i don’t think vaccines are ever 100% effective though. and we need to remember they’ve probably only had one dose, so they don’t even have the full protection.

there is no such thing as a 100% vaccine most flu ones are @ 50% and above but when the press gets hold of it it's all complete shit if the vaccine was 40% I would have it as its better than nothing i know someone who hasn't had the vaccine shes a trainee nurse she gave here reason as she didn't want to become ill from the jab (as in the side effects), i was stumped as to what to say, i mean what do you say apart from you are a proper idiot
 
It does stand to reason that if folk can still contract the virus after being vaccinated then the virus that's running around in a vaccinated body will learn to live with it and even fight against it.

Then if that person then infects another person then the virus will already be tolerant and possibly resistant to said vaccine.

We need a vaccine that's able to prevent it or we are potentially allowing the virus to become stronger.

you can still pass covid on as its a fomite virus but if you vaccinate enough it gives enough time to get a better grip on the vaccine and the virus there are only so many mutations the virus can make unless it mixes with a deadlier virus-like h7n9 but if it did there would be more death but less spread as the people would die faster than transmitting the virus this was the case with sars cov 1 and mers
 
a. and b. are what all vaccines to, to a greater or lesser percentage, no? at least that is my understanding of it. have you not heard of someone having the flu vaccine then a month later catching the flu?
It's not like the flu though as far as I'm aware.
I might be wrong but the flu seems to pop up from nowhere.
Covid didn't and won't so if we stop the spread it would die out and not pop up again but i don't think thats the same with flu.
Maybe i don't understand enough?
 
It's not like the flu though as far as I'm aware.
I might be wrong but the flu seems to pop up from nowhere.
Covid didn't and won't so if we stop the spread it would die out and not pop up again but i don't think thats the same with flu.
Maybe i don't understand enough?

i think the flu is a load of different viruses and that’s why they need to make different vaccines, because they predict which ones will be most prevalent. maybe that’s why it’s not uncommon for folk to get the flu even though they had the vaccine? not sure, maybe @vapesmarter can enlighten us?
 
i think the flu is a load of different viruses and that’s why they need to make different vaccines, because they predict which ones will be most prevalent. maybe that’s why it’s not uncommon for folk to get the flu even though they had the vaccine? not sure, maybe @vapesmarter can enlighten us?
If that's the case it would mean people are carrying variations of the flu virus all year round.
Scrap that Google says indeed it is with us all year round but more prevalent in Autumn and Winter.
 
If that's the case it would mean people are carrying variations of the flu virus all year round.
Scrap that Google says indeed it is with us all year round but more prevalent in Autumn and Winter.

Google told me that we're all going to die.
 
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